Key Points

Adani Group's stocks barely flinched despite the Wall Street Journal's recent allegations of potential US prosecution scrutiny. The Indian conglomerate quickly dismissed these claims, attributing them to aggressive external pressure. Over time, the market has begun to view such attacks as strategic misinformation, emphasizing Adani's crucial role in India's energy security. Despite global scrutiny, the company continues to show strong growth, reducing its debt while expanding investments and attracting significant global interest.

Key Points: Adani Stocks Resist WSJ Allegations Amidst Market Support

  • Adani stocks fall 1.8% defying WSJ report
  • Market views allegations as targeted attacks
  • Adani maintains investor interest and strategic growth
2 min read

Adani stocks defy WSJ report: Market shrugs off allegations amidst group's resilience

Adani defies US scrutiny report, showing resilience with minimal stock impact and ongoing investor trust.

"Market is increasingly discounting such external pressures. - Adani Group Release"

Ahmedabad, June 3

Investors largely ignored a recent Wall Street Journal report alleging new US prosecution scrutiny over Adani's potential Iran sanctions violations.

Adani Group stocks demonstrated resilience, with the group's market capitalisation down a mere 1.8 per cent, outperforming the broader Nifty's 0.7 per cent dip. Adani Enterprises saw a 1.9 per cent decline, while ACC fell just 0.3 per cent, according to company's release.

The Adani Group swiftly dismissed the report as "baseless and mischievous." Analysts suggest the market is increasingly discounting such external pressures, viewing them as targeted attacks on Adani's crucial role in India's energy security.

Despite a series of negative campaigns from global media, short-sellers, and regulatory bodies, Adani's performance and investment plans remain unimpacted. The group continues to attract global investor interest.

Over the past two years, Adani Group has achieved over 25 per cent profit growth and invested Rs 1.75 lakh crore (USD 21 billion), even amidst volatility, added the release.

This expansion has been coupled with significant debt reduction, bringing its net debt to EBITDA to a low 2.5x, among the best globally for infrastructure.

Previous major challenges, including the January 2023 Hindenburg Research report and a November 2024 US Department of Justice indictment (preceding green energy fundraising), similarly failed to disrupt the group.

It's notable that the WSJ reporter, Ben Foldy, has publicly expressed interest in writing a book on Hindenburg Research and has previously helped amplify their targets. Hindenburg itself has a history of targeting green energy companies, including Adani.

The market's sustained confidence in Adani underscores its strong fundamentals, strategic importance to India, and proven ability to overcome external challenges.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the Adani stocks article:
R
Rajesh K.
This shows how strong Indian companies have become! Foreign media keeps trying to pull down our champions but investors know the real value. Adani is building India's infrastructure - ports, airports, renewable energy. That's what matters 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
As a small investor, I'm relieved the market didn't panic. But we should still demand transparency - these allegations keep coming. Adani should hold an investor meet to clear doubts properly. Good performance is great, but trust is more important long-term.
A
Amit S.
The pattern is clear - first Hindenburg, now WSJ reporter with book ambitions. These foreign entities can't digest India's economic rise. Adani's debt reduction and 25% profit growth speaks louder than allegations. Jai Hind! 🙌
S
Sunita R.
I work in renewable energy sector. Whatever the controversies, Adani Green is doing phenomenal work in solar power. Their projects are creating jobs and helping India's energy transition. Sometimes we focus too much on negatives and ignore real contributions.
V
Vikram J.
The market reaction shows maturity. But let's not be blind cheerleaders - corporate governance standards must keep improving. India needs strong companies that follow rules, not just big companies. Balance is key for sustainable growth.
N
Neha P.
️As an MBA student, Adani case study is fascinating! How they bounce back from every crisis shows strategic resilience. But I wonder - at what point do repeated allegations start affecting global partnerships? Perception matters in international business.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50